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Titane

Film, like all art, has its own cycles. It’s not just cycles of marketplace expansion and contraction, or the rise and fall of great stars — although those are things that affect film production — but of artistic direction and audience taste.

In the 1990s, the so-called indie era began with a flowering of filmic weirdness. There was no shortage of social realism, like Kevin Smith’s Clerks, a no-budget look at the world of the service economy’s working stiffs. But there was also formal experimentation, like Quentin Tarantino’s timeline-scrambling structures; magical realism, like Spike Lee’s nods to musical theater; and downright surrealism, like Stephen Soderbergh’s experimental cul-de-sac Schizopolis. By the 2010s, the cycle had receded. Mainstream studio films had been taken over by magic and superheroes, so the underground reacted by swerving toward realism.

Now, there are signs that the film weirdos want to get weird again. This January, the Sundance lineup was crowded with magic, such as Kentucker Audley and Albert Birney’s Strawberry Mansion and Dash Shaw’s animated tour de force Cryptozoo. Then in July, the Cannes Film Festival awarded the Palme d’Or to Titane. Director Julia Ducournau became only the second woman in history to win the festival world’s most prestigious award — and, since Jane Campion’s The Piano tied with Chen Kaige’s Farewell My Concubine in 1993, the first to win it outright.

If you’ve heard anything about Titane, it’s probably that this is the movie where a woman has sex with a car. I’m here to report that yes, that absolutely does happen more than once, but there’s a lot more to it than that. We first meet Alexia (Agathe Rousselle) when she is a bratty tween. Angered by some unseen slight, she’s annoying her father (Bertrand Bonello) from the back seat as he drives on a French freeway. But the family conflict takes a tragic turn when Dad, chastising his daughter, takes his eyes off the road and crashes the car. He’s okay, but Alexia sustains a fractured cranium, which requires the implantation of a titanium plate to fix. She survives the injury, but the doctor warns Alexia’s parents to “watch for neurological signs.”

When we flash forward a decade or so, there is no shortage of “neurological signs” with Alexia. You would think her youthful brush with death would have put her off cars, but in fact the opposite has happened. Alexia loves cars — I mean, she really loves them. She makes her living as a booth girl at automotive shows, getting paid to dance seductively with custom autos. When random guys follow her into the parking lot to hit on her, she simply kills them. See, she’s not just a sexy technophile, she’s also a dangerous psychopath who has been terrorizing Europe for years.

After gruesomely dispatching a would-be rapist with a chopstick, Alexia works off a little extra energy with a Cadillac lowrider that’s been giving her the come-hither headlight. A few recreational slayings later, she finds out that 1) the cops are onto her, and 2) she’s pregnant with the Caddy’s car-child. She goes on the lam, but a close call with the gendarmerie causes her to decide that she needs to radically change her appearance. After an excruciating sequence where she remakes her face with brute force, she poses as Adrien, a missing child whom she may have murdered. Adrien’s father, Vincent (Vincent Lindon), is a fire captain who has been mourning his disappeared son for a decade. He accepts Alexia as Adrien because he wants it to be true. But Alexia’s Adrien gambit is destined to be short lived, as she grows more and more visibly pregnant. If you think it’s going to be awkward to explain to Vincent that she’s not who he thinks she is, throw in the fact that his “son” is also pregnant with a car baby.

I’m a big fan of Ducournau’s film Raw, which transforms eating disorders into cannibalistic urges for some cutting body horror. Titane is a lot messier and more uneven. It starts off strong, with Rousselle’s fearless performance channelling Malcolm McDowell’s charming psychopathy from A Clockwork Orange. But once she takes up with Vincent, and Ducournau ramps up the paranoid body dysphoria, the story loses momentum. Even if the director can’t quite stick the landing, Titane is a visually ravishing and thematically daring film unlike anything else you’ll see today.

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Film Features Film/TV

Raw

It is said we are living in the age of anxiety. Everything, from our political situation to our technology, seems to be designed to invoke anxiety’s trademark feeling of nonspecific fear. The great existential threat of our time, global warming, is everywhere and nowhere. Late stage capitalism pits us against each other and threatens to take away our jobs and security suddenly, and for no discernible reason. Our technology used to be hailed as the source of our impending liberation, but now our smartphones constantly beep and buzz for attention, and the apps that are supposed to be fun are designed to maximize addictiveness by producing artificial anxiety and doling out relief one tweet at a time.

The recent art-horror movement has proven adept at taking the zeitgeist’s nameless dread and transforming it into cathartic film experiences. Raw is not so much a horror movie as it is an anxiety movie. Fear of rejection is always a reliable producer of tension, producing the increasingly popular sub-genre, social anxiety. When we first meet Justine (Garance Marillier), she’s charging headlong into one of the most socially anxious situations imaginable: first day at a new school, in this case, a prestigious, French veterinary college. Turns out, it’s something of a family tradition. Her mother (Joana Preiss) and father (Laurent Lucas) both went to the same school, and her sister, Alexia (Ella Rumpf), is a couple of years ahead of her in the program.

Justine is a star pupil and apparently perfectly suited for life as a veterinarian. Like her mother, she’s a very strict and doctrinaire ethical vegetarian. But that doesn’t make adjusting to her new life away from home any easier. Even worse, incoming first year students in the school are traditionally subjected to some pretty out-there hazing rituals. The first night there, the upperclassmen go wilding through the freshman dorms, trashing their rooms, throwing their mattresses in a pile on the quad outside, and lining them up for a late night trip to an uncertain destination.

We see the hazing from Justine’s point of view, with Steadicam shots swirling through the disorienting crowd of nervous students. But the difficult initiation does make a certain kind of sense: These people are going to spend their professional lives up close and personal with the innards of a wide variety of animals, so drenching the first-year students in blood before taking the class picture is one way to dull their disgust reflex. And it’s also sometimes fun for the pledges. After a supremely creepy sequence where the blindfolded Justine is forced to crawl through the school’s underground passages, she emerges into a giant, underwear-only dance party. French vets, apparently, really know how to get down.

But maybe Justine’s sense of disgust gets dulled just a little too much. One of the initiation rituals is to eat a raw bit of sheep’s kidney, followed by a shot of vodka. Justine protests. She’s been a good sport so far, but she’s a vegetarian. Alexia intervenes, forcing her to gag down the gross morsel. Then things start to change for Justine. She develops a rash, then a very out-of-character craving for meat — the more raw, the better. Finally, in a hair-raising scene between Justine and Alexia, our protagonist gets a taste of human flesh, and it’s all downhill from there.

I read recently that vets, as a profession, have a very high incidence of suicide. No one seems to know why that is, but a veterinary school turns out to be the perfect place to set a movie about a reluctant cannibal. When you’re a teenager just beginning to get a good look at the world, it can seem like everyone is doing horrible things but acting like it’s just normal. When Justine searches for her sister to talk about her emerging cannibalistic impulses, she finds Alexia elbow-deep in a cow. It’s the little details like that which elevates Raw into a slick, better-than-average horror experience.

There are very few horror films directed by women, but the ones that are, such as Mary Harron’s classic American Psycho, tend to come at the genre from unusual and enlightening angles. Director Julia Ducournau has crafted the first horror film (to my knowledge) to take on eating disorders as a theme. Justine’s cravings begin in a time of stress and judgment, and she vacillates between unmanageable impulses and secret shame. Raw is a new classic of gross-out horror, but it’s also a finely tuned psychological piece about a disorder that affects millions of women.